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The diabetes drug liraglutide prevents degenerative processes in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.

J Neurosci · 2011

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a mouse study, the diabetes drug liraglutide (given daily for 8 weeks at 25 nmol/kg) prevented memory loss and reduced brain inflammation by about half in mice genetically engineered to develop Alzheimer’s-like symptoms. It also cut harmful brain deposits called β-amyloid plaques by 40–50% and lowered soluble amyloid clumps by 25%, while boosting the number of young brain cells. The drug had little effect on healthy mice but improved brain cell communication in them.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Neurosci, 2011
Citations596
Relative citation ratio17.55
NIH percentile99
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Alzheimers

Abstract

Type 2 diabetes is a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease, most likely linked to an impairment of insulin signaling in the brain. The incretin hormone glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) facilitates insulin signaling, and novel long-lasting GLP-1 analogs, such as liraglutide, are on the market as diabetes therapeutics. GLP-1 has been shown to have neuroprotective properties in vitro and in vivo. Here we tested the effects of peripherally injected liraglutide in an Alzheimer mouse model, APP(swe)/PS1(ΔE9) (APP/PS1). Liraglutide was shown to cross the blood-brain barrier in an acute study. Liraglutide was injected for 8 weeks at 25 nmol/kg body weight i.p. once daily in 7-month-old APP/PS1 and wild-type littermate controls. In APP/PS1 mice, liraglutide prevented memory impairments in object recognition and water maze tasks, and prevented synapse loss and deterioration of synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus, commonly observed in this model. Overall β-amyloid plaque count in the cortex and dense-core plaque numbers were reduced by 40-50%, while levels of soluble amyloid oligomers were reduced by 25%. The inflammation response as measured by activated microglia numbers was halved in liraglutide-treated APP/PS1 mice. Numbers of young neurons in the dentate gyrus were increased in APP/PS1 mice with treatment. Liraglutide treatment had little effect on littermate control mice, whose behavior was comparable to wild-type saline controls; however, synaptic plasticity was enhanced in the drug group. Our results show that liraglutide prevents key neurodegenerative developments found in Alzheimer's disease, suggesting that GLP-1 analogs represent a novel treatment strategy for Alzheimer's disease.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 21525299 ↗

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